Sunscreen Ranker Independent ranker
Formulation & Ingredient Deep-Dives

The Difference Between Nano and Non-Nano Zinc

What the particle-size debate actually means for your skin.

By the numbers

Avobenzone can lose a large share of its UV protection within the first hour without a stabilizer.

Iron oxides in tinted sunscreen attenuate over 70% of high-energy visible blue light, adding the kind of protection plain zinc alone doesn't deliver.
What the evidence shows

Frequently asked questions

Why are some UV filters more photostable?

A photostable filter keeps absorbing UV without breaking down in sunlight. Older filters like avobenzone can lose protection within an hour unless paired with stabilizers such as octocrylene. Next-generation filters are engineered to stay chemically stable, so protection lasts longer — though reapplication is still advised.

What is the difference between nano and non-nano zinc?

Nano zinc has smaller particles, so it rubs in more clearly with less white cast; non-nano uses larger particles that scatter more visible light but are preferred by some for environmental or personal reasons. Current evidence indicates nanoparticles in sunscreen don't penetrate healthy skin.

How do sunscreens become water-resistant?

Water resistance comes from film-forming polymers that help the sunscreen layer cling through water and sweat. US labels may claim '40 minutes' or '80 minutes' of water resistance — never 'waterproof.' Reapply after swimming, heavy sweating or towel drying to keep protection intact.

What people are asking

r/SkincareScience: 'What is a film former in sunscreen?'

Sources & citations

  • Araujo et al., nanostructured lipid carriers for sunscreen (2024)
  • labmuffin.com ↗

More on Formulation

← All articles